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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Oregon
Log Homes moving The
Oregon Log Homes production site on Highway 20 just east of Sisters is bare
of logs for the first time in most people's memory.
That has led many to wonder
if the company is going out of business or selling their operation.
"No, the business is not for
sale," said owner Mike Neary. "What we are doing is selling the 10-acre
production site here in Sisters and consolidating in Maupin out at our
80-acre site.
"We also have an indoor facility
there," said Neary, but "we will open a sales office in Sisters. We are
shopping for space right now."
The production site in Sisters
is on the market at $797,500. It was listed with Re/Max Town & Country
Realty on September 10. A sale is pending during negotiations with the
prospective buyers. The giant crane and the log home on the site are being
sold with the property.
There will be no immediate
layoffs at Oregon Log Homes as a result of the sale, according to Neary.
Over the span of two years the personnel at the Sisters site were down-scaled
from 25 employees to nine.
Neary told The Nugget
that he started his business in Redmond in 1980 and later, in 1984, purchased
the site east of Sisters. In 1990, Oregon Log Homes was commissioned to
build the Disney Wilderness Lodge. It was at this point that Neary bought
the mill in Maupin to handle increased demand.
"It just didn't make sense
to have production going in two different places," Neary said. "I wanted
one or the other running full bore."
Also, he felt the little town
of Maupin could use the tax money.
After the North American Free
Trade Agreement of 1992, Canada started to control the lumber market here
in the U.S. In order to compete with the Canadians, Neary had to find
a way to lower his overhead.
"Consolidation was one obvious
answer. This was something I've wanted to do for a couple of years now,"
said Neary.
The homes are assembled at
the production site. Then the parts are numbered and the home is disassembled.
In pieces, the home is then shipped to the home site where it is reassembled
according to the numbers.
Neary noted that, "People
wanting a quality log home in Sisters can still get the same great product
from us. It will just come from Maupin." |
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